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re: Dance in my pants

Posted by:
TommyCool 05:00 pm UTC 07/21/07
In reply to: re: Dance in my pants - pidunk 11:20 am UTC 07/21/07

Thanx for all the words, but id rather have an opinion of someone who sticks to the facts instead of making up her own, Mrs. Steinman. (or was it Mrs. O Brein ?)

>
>
> > According to several sources (incl the RR) DIMP was
> > written for Neverland, so before Paradise. Thanx for
> > bringing this up, because i always wanted to ask this
> > question, since there are no recordings of the original
> > DIMP song for Neverland. Does anyone know if its the exact
> > same song as we hear on BFG ???
> >
> It would surprise me to see this in the Neverland work,
> and it did occur in the Neverland work that is shown in
> the publications reprinted on this site, but indeed is
> shown as not available on the page that has some
> downloads. Further, the part of the transcript which
> includes this has been omitted, with the apology for its
> incompleteness.
>
> Now I will say my opinion of this. Dance In My Pants is
> well compared with the incidents of themes in RH.
> Philosophically these items are tied. Even if we take the
> version that we know of it, it is my opinion of this. I
> have not yet heard the early stage performed work with
> this title. But, the actual theme of Neverland does not
> give much to reverie, yet could have taken a point of
> reverie as rebellion in preparation for the later
> admonishments by characters in the script. Neverland is a
> dark play even as some elements are amusing. And you may
> not notice it with all the music, but RH is a dark story
> as well, with elements amusing. One has a historian, and
> one has a criminologist, doing basically the same things
> with varying degrees of polish between their differing
> dramatic structures, but both are dressed
> inachronistically, and both are narrators giving leads to
> the chapters of the stories, addressing the audience as a
> visible character. The historian wants to tell the
> audience "tonight's history", and the criminologist says
> "I would like, if I may, take you on a strange journey."
> as he begins to tell the story of one night's history.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


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